Post on 29-Jul-2020
From Emerging to Independent Adults: Fostering StudentResilience & ResponsibilityAbroad
Monique Fecteau - Director, Wellesley-in-AixLeslie Ray – Licensed psychotherapist, San Diego, CAThomas Roman – Co-Director, IFE (Institute for Field Education)
Forum on Education Abroad – Seattle, March 2017
Introduction, sources, session outline Genesis of topic
Primary sources & resources:
J. Arnett: developmental model of emerging adults
K. Ginsburg: research & work on resilience-building in childhood & youth
C. Kinginger: research on identity, language learning & study abroad
Academy of Arts & Sciences Feb 2017 report: America’s Languages
+ Our experiences & observations from working with students in France
+ Student views & voices (testimonials)
I. Leslie – On responsibility & resilience in emerging adults abroad
II. Monique – role of 2nd language skills
III. Thomas – role of internships
Responsibility
Decision-making
Personal accountability
Student voice
Isabel – Intern in theater company in Paris
“At the end of my time abroad I had to return to the US and school, and what I found somewhat satisfying and mildly disturbing was that my college campus was no longer fun for me. This program showed me what it was like living in the real world, making your own decisions and being responsible for your actions. Coming back to a sheltered school where there isn't that freedom (...) was honestly quite awful. There is nothing I would rather do now than graduate and go live in a city where I can once again spread my wings”.
What is resilience?
Power or ability to return to the original form or position (physics).
Ability to bounce back or recover from adversity(psychology).
Kenneth R. Ginsburg Building Resilience in Children &
Teens: Giving Kids Roots and Wings. (3rd edition, 2015)
American Academy of Pediatrics
Ginsburg’s 7 Crucial C’s of Resilience
The two fundamental C’s
Competence
acquired through actual experience
Confidenceacquired through demonstrated competence in real
situations
Confidence is developed through
taking risks and experiencing success.
Success leaves clues.
Vanessa – Intern in 2 Paris museums“The internships gave me more confidence in my French, especially rewarding after five weeks of intensive learning at the program center before the internships. I felt really assured when I realized that I could understand almost everything that my colleagues talked about, had a clear idea of what tasks my supervisor wanted me to do, and did not really encounter problems with communication. That was a huge boost to my confidence, since before this I had only practiced French either in classrooms or in casual settings (i.e. with a French host family). And knowing that I could handle an internship well in a country that I wasn’t so familiar with, I felt sure that I would do really well, if not better, in internship/jobs in the US as well. In that sense, it was a great first internship(s) experience which really paved the way for more opportunities down the road.”
Setting students up for success
Expect 20-year olds to … Push the envelope! Challenge authority Make mistakes
Our role: How to give students the structure inwhich they can make good decisions for themselves?
(and knowing when to get out of the way!)
Student voice: Structure & Support
Nate – Intern in soccer club in Strasbourg
“I think that one of the most beneficial aspects of this past semester was professional experience and development that helped foster my independence. Having an actual internship in a foreign city in a foreign language might seem daunting, but the intensive period prior really helps get you ready. Once you are at the internship period, one thing I noticed that helped a lot was that my program staff was there for you whenever you needed, while continuing to foster a certain professional independence.”
Other C’s in Ginsburg’s « web »
Connection: sense of group belonging (family, civic, educational, athletic, etc.)
Character: values (e.g., caring, tenacity, effort) Contribution: sense of purpose, serving others
Coping: repertoire of positive, adaptive strategies Control: decision-making; choices + actions =
outcomes
Student voice: Coping & Control
Maddie – Intern in research center for International Studies in Strasbourg
“doing an internship in a language that isn't my first language definitely helped me notice that I tend to be a little more timid in new surroundings, but especially in a foreign language. Recognizing that has helped me try and fix that problem. Generally speaking, having enough confidence isn't something that I tend to have a problem with, but I would definitely say that living in a foreign country for four months and doing an internship in French has made me a feel a lot more self-assured and a lot more confident, and not only when it comes to speaking French.”
Additional C’s for students abroad
Courage – personal challenge, leap into the unknown, veturing out of one’s comfort zone
Curiosity – desire to learn & engage; pre-requisite for managing inevitable hiccups
On curiosity …
THINKFEELDO
One more!
COMMITMENT To program goals To individual goals
Knowledge of country & its place in world Experiencing culture from within Gaining different perspectives on the world Improving language proficiency
Role of L2 skills
Student testimonials underscore key role of French/L2 skills
in fostering confidence, independence & success abroad.
Affective & personality factors in language acquisitionlanguage ego: personal nature of L2 acquisition, new identity
risk-taking: overcoming fear of looking ridiculous, of not being
understood, of loss of identity, fear of failure
anxiety: debilitative (bad kind) versus facilitative (good kind)
motivation: extrinsic/intrinsic; instrumental/integrative
Courage – Curiosity - Commitment
Cathy – Intern in a music school in Paris“After thriving in French courses in college, I was so mortified because I realized that it was a whole new playing field in actual French society where my level of French was clearly elementary. Determined, I went home from class that day and googled "how to pronounce French r" and did a few step-by-step exercises with my throat every night until I was able to make the r sound in the back of my throat and say "preuve" correctly by the end of the course. I was so frustrated but learned in that moment that my learning was in my hands.”
Kinginger’s « activist stance »
Celeste Kinginger – SLA researcher at Penn State Language Learning in SA: Case Histories of Americans in France (MLJ, 2008)
American students abroad: Negotiation of difference? (Lang Teaching, 2010)
Contemporary SA & FL Learning: An activist’s guidebook (CALPER, 2010)
Identity & Language Learning in Study Abroad (FL Annals, 2013, vol. 46)
Insufficient emphasis on L2 learning in programs abroad (non-English).
Case studies = individual differences, especially among advanced learners.
Critique of research: over-emphasis on student perspectives, insufficientattention to quality of interactions with local hosts, no perspectives from host nationals or on-site actors, no studies on student motivation & desire to learn while studying abroad.
Need for explicit L2 instruction on pragmatic aspects of language & relationship to presentation of self and one’s social identity.
As study abroad professionals…
If we don’t address the issue of the role of second language
acquisition & learning in studyabroad programs, who will?
RESPONSIBILITY
Language enrollments – MLA stats
1986: 275,132
TOP 5 STATES
CA (1) 31,314 NY (2) 22,574 MA (3) 14,100 TX (4) 13,671 PA (5) 13,384
+10,000 : NC, OH, VA
2013: 197,757
TOP 5 STATES
CA (2) 19,830 NY (1) 20,924 MA (5) 7,436 TX (4) 9,783 PA (3) 9,952
All others: below 7,200
MLA Report – February 2015
SINCE 2009Overall FL enrollments - 6.7%
Spanish (1st time) - 8.2%
French - 8.1%
German - 9.3%
Italian -11.3%
Japanese - 7.8%
Arabic - 7.5%
Russian -17.9%
And the winners are…
Enrollment increases since 2009
Korean + 44.7%ASL + 19.1%Portuguese + 10.1%Chinese + 2.0%
Commission on Language LearningFeb 2017 Report
America’s Languages: Investing in LanguageEducation for the 21st Century
www.amacad.org/language
Commissioned by 8 members of Congress (4 Senate + 4 Representatives)
Only 20.7% of U.S. population speaks a L2, far fewer at a functional level.
2014 NAFSA study: 40% of U.S. business executives reported failure to reach international potential due to language barriers.
Testimonials of U.S. professionals on importance of FL skills to success.
Rec n°5: Promote L2 opps through immersion in L2 cultures and increase
international internships sponsored by businesses and NGO’s.
Conclusion of report
« Language acquisition on the scale that thisCommission proposes will require a combination of skillful instruction, technicalassistance and innovation, new and redirected investments, public-privatepartnerships, and the personal commitmentof each individual language learner. » p. 30
InternshipsA stressful experience by nature
working in a second language
different culture & work ethos
often a 1st professional experience
non-classroom format; a “real-life” experience
lack of training, frames of reference, protocols, cultural codes
miscommunication, mistakes, delays
responsibilities, assignments, tasks = pressure
occasional boredom-> need to be proactive
work overload -> feeling overwhelmed
co-workers: personalities, interpersonal & group dynamics
Payoffs in terms of resilience
sense of independence (coping, control) self-confidence team work amidst diversity (connection, contribution) time-management (coping, control) cross-cultural learning & reciprocity (competence,
connection) self-knowledge & personal growth (confidence, control) empathy (character) professional skills (competence, confidence) language proficiency/fluency (competence, confidence)
Student voice
Nairuti – Intern in Belgian public health agency in Brussels
“My experience really shaped my personal and professional development. By engaging in the field while simultaneously developing a critical perspective via memoir-writing, I was able to reconcile and engage with both my academic interests and professional skill development.”
8 Principles of Good Practice for All Experiential Learning Activities
National Society of Experiential Educationwww.nsee.org
1. Intention
2. Preparedness and Planning
3. Authenticity
4. Reflection
5. Orientation and Training
6. Monitoring and Continuous Improvement
7. Assessment and Evaluation
8. Acknowledgment
Providing structure & support
Preparation -> content-rich (courses, workshops, peer advice from past participants)
Follow-up -> weekly class, check-in, workshops Evaluation & critical thinking -> 3-way meeting
Advising -> academic, professional Re-entry -> maintaining & building on skills
Caring Coddling
Alain – Intern in public hospital in Paris, Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
“There is perhaps no word more encompassing of the personal growth that occurs during an internship abroad than resilience. While the positive impact of international study on student independence, self-confidence, and growth is clear, I believe these benefits are accentuated and further developed within the context of an internship. For me, classroom study, while vital to formal education, preserved the familiar student-teacher dynamic and, at times, isolated my studies from their applicability to the professionalism of the ‘real world.’ My internship experience with IFE took me out of this comfort zone, not only with respect to language and culture but pedagogical perspective as well”.
Your turn!
1) What successes have you had at yourinstitution with regard to fostering the seven (or ten!) C’s and cultivatingresilience and responsibility in yourstudents?
2) Which C’s would you like to developfurther?
Contact info
Leslie Ray leslie.ray@gmail.com
Thomas Roman thomas.roman@ife-edu.eu
Monique Fecteau mfecteau@wellesley.edu